Events
A conference organized by the Center for the Art of East Asia, Department of Art History, University of Chicago
Location: The Franke Institute for the Humanities, 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637
Morning, April 14
Opening Remarks: Wu Hung (University of Chicago)
East Asian Connections
Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan (Yale University), Carving the Liao Way: A New Direction in Japanese Buddhist Statuary at the Turn of the Eleventh Century
François Louis (Bard Graduate Center), Nomadic Style in Tenth-Century China
Yang Lu (University of Kansas), A Civilized Warlord in Early Tenth Century Hebei: The Tomb of Wang Chuzhi and Its Cultural Significance
Afternoon, April 14
Rethinking Chinese Painting History
Jonathan Hay (Institute of Fine Arts, NYU), On the Art-historical Narrativization of Tenth-century Chinese Painting
Foong Ping (University of Chicago), A Political History of Reconstituting Institutions for Painting in the Early Song Dynasty
Heping Liu (Wellesley College), Snow, Snowscape, and Some Tenth-Century Sources for the Making of Landscape of Exile
De-nin D. Lee (Bowdoin College), Conduits of Culture: The Movements and Artistic Impact of Women and Their Proxies in Tenth-century China
Morning, April 15
New Development in Art and Visual Culture
Samuel C. Morse (Amherst College), From Temple Workshop to Urban Atelier: Buddhist Sculpture in Japan in the Tenth Century
Jeehee Hong (Dartmouth College), Refashioning the Faces of the Earth: Transformation of a Shensha Figurine in Tenth-century Mortuary Space
Hui-Wen Lu (National Taiwan University), Wild Cursive Calligraphy, Poetry, and Chan Monks in Tenth-Century China
Jenny So (Chinese University, Hong Kong), Five Dynasties-Liao-Song: Dynastic-ethnic-regional Identities in Jades of the Tenth Century
Afternoon, April 15
Brief Summary by Wu Hung and a roundtable discussion with all the speakers
A conference organized by the Center for the Art of East Asia, Department of Art History, University of Chicago
Location: The Franke Institute for the Humanities, 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637
Morning, April 14
Opening Remarks: Wu Hung (University of Chicago)
East Asian Connections
Mimi Hall Yiengpruksawan (Yale University), Carving the Liao Way: A New Direction in Japanese Buddhist Statuary at the Turn of the Eleventh Century
François Louis (Bard Graduate Center), Nomadic Style in Tenth-Century China
Yang Lu (University of Kansas), A Civilized Warlord in Early Tenth Century Hebei: The Tomb of Wang Chuzhi and Its Cultural Significance
Afternoon, April 14
Rethinking Chinese Painting History
Jonathan Hay (Institute of Fine Arts, NYU), On the Art-historical Narrativization of Tenth-century Chinese Painting
Foong Ping (University of Chicago), A Political History of Reconstituting Institutions for Painting in the Early Song Dynasty
Heping Liu (Wellesley College), Snow, Snowscape, and Some Tenth-Century Sources for the Making of Landscape of Exile
De-nin D. Lee (Bowdoin College), Conduits of Culture: The Movements and Artistic Impact of Women and Their Proxies in Tenth-century China
Morning, April 15
New Development in Art and Visual Culture
Samuel C. Morse (Amherst College), From Temple Workshop to Urban Atelier: Buddhist Sculpture in Japan in the Tenth Century
Jeehee Hong (Dartmouth College), Refashioning the Faces of the Earth: Transformation of a Shensha Figurine in Tenth-century Mortuary Space
Hui-Wen Lu (National Taiwan University), Wild Cursive Calligraphy, Poetry, and Chan Monks in Tenth-Century China
Jenny So (Chinese University, Hong Kong), Five Dynasties-Liao-Song: Dynastic-ethnic-regional Identities in Jades of the Tenth Century
Afternoon, April 15
Brief Summary by Wu Hung and a roundtable discussion with all the speakers

